Don't scare people away with your email (it's bad Netiquette)
#netiquette
#paulbabicki
Property of Millennial Branding
Building up a sizable email list takes a lot of work, and late nights. For all your trouble, you want to continually grow your list, or at the very least, keep good numbers. However, if you take a closer look, you’ll always notice a few drops now and then.
On the flip side, your direct actions may be causing the drop in email numbers. As a wise business person, you want to avoid this at all costs. The following are some of the things you should do to avoid driving away email subscribers. Consider them keenly, and apply changes accordingly.
1. Provide relevant content
Does your email content provide relevant information? Stay away from the self-promotional material. Focus on information that is engaging, helpful, and adds value to the customer experience. That way, a subscriber is more likely to read through and follow-up on the message given.
2. Frequency
After relevance, the frequency of your emails plays a big role in how susceptible you are to opt-outs. There’s isn’t a general rule of thumb when it comes to frequency of sending out emails, but once you start emailing people twice a day, every day of the week, you are asking for trouble. Many times, your frequency will depend on the type and quality of information you are sending out. As such, focus on providing great content, even if you email your list once a month.
3. Email “readability”
Your email content has to be
information that is easily readable, regardless of the medium used to access
it. First, appearances are everything and if your email doesn’t appeal to the
eye of the reader, it will be deleted even before they get to see who sent it.
This is something to consider as a lot of audiences rely on mobile devices to
view emails. Make sure your design team comes up with content that reads as
well on a tablet as it would on a desktop. Keep the unnecessary clutter and ads
away, and you’re sure to keep that list happy.
4. Lengthy emails
Just as off-putting as a poorly
designed email is, a lengthy one is just as quickly discarded. Few people have
the time to pore over paragraphs of material in the few minutes they have to
scan their inbox.
Keep things short and concise. Clearly state the purpose of the
email, elaborate on how the offer/product/service helps them, then give them a
reason to act on the message. Quick and simple, it shouldn’t take more than
half a page to communicate your message and sign off.
5. Clear communication
Your subject line has to connect to
what the rest of the email conveys. If the subject line says “Best tips to
writing resumes,” but the email offers tips on how to prepare for interviews,
then there’s clearly a disconnect between what you promised the readers, and
what you actually serve up to them.
6. Feigning familiarity
Feigning familiarity with the old-age
personal greeting “Hi Susan” may work well if you know the person personally,
but won’t be taken well by a new subscriber who doesn’t know anything about the
business. Rather than go for the personal approach, focus on providing relevant
content.
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About Netiquette IQ
My book, "Netiquette IQ - A Comprehensive Guide to Improve, Enhance and Add Power to Your Email" has gone on sale at the CreateSpace estore:http://createspace.com/4083121
As a Netiquette IQ blog reader, you can use the discount code KBQALZA7. This discount is only through the estore. Thank you for your support on the blog and with the book. The book and Kindle version are now available on Amazon. Please visit my author profile at
http://www.amazon.com/Paul-Babicki/e/B00FY3GW7S
Also here:
amazon.com/author/paulbabicki
More good news!
The Kindle version of my book is now available! Go to the following site to purchase it:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FFAMN0U
#PaulBabicki
#netiquette
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